So she and Soresi (@GianmarcoSoresi), who met about a year ago, collaborated on “MTA Shames NYC” and crossed some lines themselves, says the “20-something” actress, writer, and prolific comedy sketch artist.

Sass (@Megan_Sass) credits Soresi with the idea and the two decided to answer this question: “What if the announcements just kept getting more preachy.”

So, on a guerilla video shoot on a downtown A train, the pair, videographer Andy Zou (@cyjackx andandyzou.com), and a group of performers got together and the result was Metrocard Magic.

It starts with a group of winter coat-clad New Yorkers, some on their phones, others with their morning java fix, listening up when the announcer comes on. It’s one we’ve all heard.

“Ladies and gentlemen, if you see an elderly, pregnant, or handicapped person near you, please offer your seat. You’ll be standing up for what’s right. Courtesy is contagious and it begins with you.”

Who can’t agree with that? Everyone smiles and a man immediately stands to let an expectant mom get off her feet

Then another we’ve all heard — the one about suspicious, unattended packages. Except this one has a twist, when the announcer notes, “But be aware we have unconscious biases. So take care not to rush to judgment.”

“That was weird,” the straphanger played by Soresi looks up and says.

“I don’t remember the subway announcements being so preachy,” a woman adds.

The recorded announcements then really head down the yellow brick road of politically-correct hilarity and have passengers looking at each other stunned.

“Ladies and gentlemen, hundreds of civilians die every day in the Middle East because of American bomb. If you aren’t calling your congressman to make it stop, you are responsible.”

Passengers take that one personally, and one stammers, “I am doing the best I can!”

Announcer: “Also, dogs are better than cats.”

Then the Starbucks set are set upon -- Sass’ latte-loving character in particular. The announcer urges riders to donate 10% of their income “to fight the spread of Ebola in Africa.”

“That double shot soy chai latte is delicious, but perhaps you can just drink a f***ing cup of coffee and save someone’s life! That means you, Sheila.”

The MTA declined Metro’s request for comment.

THE MTA's SUBWAY COURTESY CAMPAIGN

The MTA launched the Courtesy Counts campaign on the subways in January with new audio announcements and graphically-enhanced placards in 2,600 cars that it illustrate the list of “Do’s” -- and a list what MTA Corporate Communications calls “No No’s.”

“The messages serve to remind the MTA’s 8.6 million daily customers that they can help make the trip quicker and more pleasant by demonstrating a personal, consistent commitment to courtesy,” the agency said in statement in December.